09/01/2026
❗️❗️⚖️ DESIGN AND BUILD: Architect ka ba? Nagawa mo na design at plano pero di ka pa rin binabayaran worst hindi nababayaran dahil hindi na matutuloy ang construction. Alamin ano pwedeng gawin❗️⚖️
RA 9266 expressly recognizes architecture as a professional service, not a mere preliminary proposal.
Once you rendered architectural services such as:
• site evaluation
• conceptual and schematic design
• design development
• revisions based on the client’s instructions
you performed professional acts of architecture.
These are compensable services, regardless of whether construction proceeds or not.
Design is not free simply because construction did not happen.
Can a client lawfully back out after the design phase without paying under RA 9266?
No.
While a client may decide not to proceed with construction, RA 9266 does not allow a client to benefit from architectural services without compensation.
Backing out due to “fear of scams”:
1. does not negate the fact that professional services were rendered, and
2.does not extinguish the obligation to pay for architectural work already done.
This would be contrary to the intent of RA 9266, which protects the dignity, value, and integrity of architectural practice.
Who owns the architectural plans and designs under RA 9266?
The architect.
RA 9266 clearly provides that Architectural plans, drawings, and designs are the intellectual property of the architect, and Ownership remains with the architect unless there is full payment and a written agreement transferring rights.
Until payment is made:
1. The client has no legal right to use the plans
2. The plans cannot be submitted for permits, construction, bidding, or given to another professional
Any use without authority may be considered illegal and unethical.
Does the absence of construction mean an architect have no right to be paid?
No. That is a common misconception.
Design and Build involves two legally separable components:
1. Design services (professional services)
2. Construction ex*****on
Even if the client chooses not to proceed with construction, she remains liable for:
1.Architectural design services
2. Conceptualization
3. Revisions and coordination
4. Time, manpower, and resources spent
Unless you expressly agreed that the design was free or contingent on construction (which is rare and dangerous), the design phase is compensable.
Payment of professional fees is not dependent on construction, unless expressly stated in your contract.
Once you rendered architectural services conceptual designs, drawings, or plans the client incurs a legal obligation to pay. Non-payment constitutes breach of contract, whether written or implied.
Your services are complete upon delivery of the agreed scope, not upon project ex*****on.
Architectural plans, even at the conceptual or schematic stage, are intellectual property.
Unless there is: full payment and a written transfer or license,
the client has no right to use, reproduce, submit, revise, or build from your plans.
Non-payment automatically nullifies any implied permission to use the design.
A client has the right to exercise due diligence and even decide not to proceed with construction. However, that right does not erase her obligation to pay for services already rendered.
What the law does not allow is this:
A client benefiting from professional services, designs, revisions, and intellectual labor then walking away without compensation.
If:
1. You were engaged to prepare designs,
2. You actually delivered the designs,
3. The client participated (gave inputs, requested edits, reviewed outputs),
then a professional engagement already existed, even if there was no final construction contract.
Her fear of construction scams does not retroactively invalidate the work you already performed.
FINAL LEGAL KVP TAKEAWAY
Your client is not wrong to be cautious,
but she is wrong if she believes caution excuses non-payment.
Architectural design is not speculative charity.
It is professional work protected by contract and law.
Design may be separable from construction but payment is not optional.